This is a western meant for CinemaScope. Shot in the Banff
and Jasper National Parks of Alberta, Canada, it’s a breathtaking travelogue of
river, woods, and snowy mountains. The majestic scenery often
dwarfs its handful of characters. The film cries out to be seen on the Big
Screen.
Viewers today are more likely to know this film because of
one of its two stars, Marilyn Monroe. Although stronger actresses have appeared
in westerns, she makes it one of the few whose female lead carries as much
interest as the men cast opposite her. One could argue that River of No
Return is a Marilyn Monroe picture and a
western only incidentally.
Which is not to say that she overshadows her co-star Robert
Mitchum. Only a decade after his first leading role in Nevada (1944), reviewed here a while ago, he is a solid
presence on screen. He persuades with his physical authority and the measured
range of his voice.
Plot. In the opening
scene, Mitchum is reunited with his young son (Tommy Rettig). The boy has been
sent to his father who is homesteading not far from a tent city in the gold
fields of the Northwest. Monroe works there as a chanteuse in a saloon. Her
boyfriend (Rory Calhoun) is a gambler who has just won a gold mine in a card
game. No horses being available, he buys a raft that will take them downriver
to the nearest town where he can file at a claims office.
Robert Mitchum, Marilyn Monroe |
Travel by raft is rougher going than they expected, and they
are rescued by Mitchum as they pass by his homestead. The river, Mitchum tells
Calhoun, is a series of treacherous rapids. They’ll never make it. In a change
of plans, Calhoun steals Mitchum’s rifle and horse and heads cross country,
leaving Monroe behind with the promise that he’ll return in five days.
An Indian raid forces Mitchum, Monroe and the boy to take to
the raft and head downriver themselves. The rest of the film is their long,
hair-raising journey, the odds against them all the way. Besides more hostile
Indians, they encounter only two other humans (Murvyn Vye, Douglas Spencer),
the prospectors who lost their mine to Calhoun. They are after the gambler but
make trouble for Mitchum when one of them pulls a knife on him.
There’s plenty of trouble as well between Mitchum and
Monroe. She’s loyal to Calhoun and gets worried when Mitchum
reminds her that as a horse thief her gambler boyfriend deserves to hang. She tries several
ways to slow their progress downriver, including making nice to Mitchum, which
he doesn’t buy and leads instead to a fierce wrestling match between the two of
them.
Marilyn Monroe, Rory Calhoun |
Finally arriving at their destination, they discover Calhoun
busy playing cards and full of excuses for abandoning Monroe. Realizing the
depth of his betrayal, she tries to prevent him from settling scores with
Mitchum. The conflicts between the three of them are resolved in a couple of
unexpected ways that I’ll leave for curious readers to discover for themselves.
Scale. The film’s
director was the formidable Otto Preminger. The scale of the production shows his
mark on the material. The opening scene, set after dark in the tent city, is a
tour de force as the camera follows Mitchum riding through a
maze of tents and people. The shot starts simple and then continues to unfold
like a 12-ring circus as the camera tracks and tracks and tracks. We are slowly immersed in a scene as complex as a Hieronymus Bosch painting of
hell.
Getting off his horse, Mitchum talks briefly to a priest,
who is dismounting from a mule, then walks toward the camera to speak to the
trading post owner, too busy to look up from his work. Behind them, a horse
drawn wagon emerges from a lake and tips to one side, its women passengers
slipping into the water, shrieking with laughter, and then being carried off by
several men. It is storytelling on a grand scale.
One often reads of Monroe as a tentative actress, requiring
many takes to complete a scene. A marvel of this film is the many scenes done
as a master shot, played through from start to finish without edits. In them, she
doesn’t miss a beat or take a false step. In a few she’s also playing a guitar
as she sings, and her strumming of the guitar is tightly synchronous with the
song track.
Then there are the river scenes themselves. Stuntmen
obviously (and bravely) handled the raft in the long shots. But in closer
shots, we can see it’s Mitchum and Monroe. In the worst of the
rapids, the screen image is clearly a process shot, done in the studio. But
intercut with point of view shots taken on the river, the camerawork is
thrilling. With the roar of the water on the soundtrack, it had to be a
visceral experience for most 1950s moviegoers.
Marilyn Monroe and Tommy Rettig |
Themes. The script
gives us a father-son theme often found in westerns of the time. We get another
example in the contemporary film, Shane (1953). In that film,
also shot in scenic surroundings, the boy is divided between his morally
upright father and the mysterious stranger who turns out to be a gunslinger. In
River of No Return, Mitchum is a blend
of those two men, and the boy is torn by what he learns of his father’s past.
The relationship between Monroe’s and Mitchum’s characters
is not, as you’d expect, romantic. There’s an edge often in her regard for him,
and he never seems to win more than grudging respect. For his part, he develops
no warmth for her either. When he grabs her and physically overpowers her in a
sexually fraught scene in the woods, it seems intended only to show her who’s
boss.
For the entire trip, she is a burden to him, and one likely
to betray any trust he might place in her. We might even dislike her ourselves,
except that she is tender to Mitchum’s son, and the motherless boy is
emotionally attached to her from the beginning. She and Mitchum finally reach
something like a truce when he finds shelter for them and tells her to get out
of her wet clothes and wrap up in a dry blanket. He then helps her warm up by
giving her a long, businesslike rub down.
There’s not an ounce of chemistry between the two of them in
the scene. It makes an interesting bookend to their violent wrestling match in
the woods. Again, he forces himself on her and dominates her. This time he’s
got her to disrobe voluntarily, but his touch is without erotic intent.
She neither resists nor shows that she welcomes his attention. It’s a curious
but perfectly believable scene between two people who have fought each other to a draw.
Marilyn, chanteuse |
Wrapping up. One
could go on, but enough is enough. I saw this film when it was new and enjoyed
it for the excitement of it. At 12, you miss a lot of the nuances, broad as
they are, but I found this film enjoyable in different ways today. It takes
some doing to downsize the mythic proportions of a Marilyn Monroe and fit her
character into a western story. But you can forget all that after a while and
begin seeing her as the tough-hearted, lost young woman she’s playing.
English-born screenwriter Frank Fenton provided the screenplay. Also a novelist and writer of short stories, he is remembered for the novel A Place in the Sun (1942).
I love Tennessee Ernie Ford’s treatment of the film’s theme song, but I could do without Monroe’s songs. They seem too
modern for the gold rush era. Her performance of them would be more at
home in a vehicle like Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, but even so, they don’t spoil the film as a western. If Marlene
Dietrich can belt out a couple songs as the chanteuse in Destry Rides
Again (1939), we can grant the same license
to this film.
River of No Return is
currently available at netflix and at amazon and Barnes&Noble. For more of
Tuesday’s Overlooked Films and TV, click over to Todd Mason’s blog.
Coming up: John Reese, The Blowholers (1971)
Even at 12, I was taken with Marylin Monroe's beauty and she was dead by then! Nice review. I have been meaning to watch Bus Stop, which part was filmed at the North Fork Store in Idaho (north of Ketchum) where I spent a few summers running a camp.
ReplyDeleteI first saw this film back in the fifties when it first came out. Then I saw it again recently when it was on TV. I liked the movie but I had a problem with Marilyn Monroe's part. I felt that she was excellent in movies like SOME LIKE IT HOT, THE SEVEN YEAR ITCH, and even a modern day western like THE MISFITS. But I didn't think this was a role for her talents.
ReplyDeleteHNY, Ron! Eschewing easy jokes about the big screen being necessary to fully display Monroe, I think I agree with Walker about this performance by her...and with you that she's more than game, and Mitchum acquits himself well...and they're a good pair (not a joke, either) (the silent version of NEVADA is in this week's mix).
ReplyDeleteThe only Marilyn Monroe movie I've watched all the way through is Niagara.
ReplyDeleteI can't imagine Charles has never seen SOME LIKE IT HOT but anyway, this is a good matchup, isn't it. Mitchum is almost always good and he probably spurred her on. I have seen it but not in years. Need to watch this and Niagara again soon.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the nice review. I somehow missed this western and have often wondered about it since encountering the novel it was based upon. RIVER OF NO RETURN, from the theme song, was also the title of the biography of Tennessee Ernie Ford's marriage, written by their oldest son.
ReplyDelete